quantized bubble - traduction vers russe
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quantized bubble - traduction vers russe

QUANTIZED FLUX CIRCULATION OF SOME PHYSICAL QUANTITY
Quantized Vortices; Quantized vortices; Quantized vortex; Quantum vortices
  • arxiv=1807.06746}}</ref>

quantized bubble      

['kwɔntaizd'bʌb(ə)l]

вычислительная техника

ложный цилиндрический магнитный домен (вызывающий нарушение в запоминающем устройстве ЭВМ)

gas bubble         
  • A [[soap bubble]] floating in the air
GLOBULE OF ONE SUBSTANCE IN ANOTHER, USUALLY GAS IN A LIQUID
Air bubble; Gas bubble; Liquid bubble; 🫧

медицина

газовый пузырёк

нефтегазовая промышленность

газовый пузырь

пузырьки газа

bubble memory         
  • Bubble memory driver coils/windings/field coils and guides (T bar guides in this case); the guides or propagation elements, are on top of a magnetic film, which is on top of a substrate chip. This is mounted to a PCB (not shown) and then surrounded by two windings.
TYPE OF NON-VOLATILE COMPUTER MEMORY
Magnetic bubble memory; Magnet bubble memory; GGGQEP

['bʌb(ə)lmem(ə)ri]

общая лексика

память на цилиндрических магнитных доменах, ЦМД-память

энергонезависимая, устойчивая к радиационным излучениям память, широко используется в бортовых компьютерах (в обычных применениях её быстро вытеснила технология EEPROM). Разработана А. Бобеком (A.H. Bobeck) в Bell Laboratories в 1967 г

вычислительная техника

память на цилиндрических магнитных доменах

синоним

bubble storage

Définition

bubble memory
A storage device built using materials such as gadolinium gallium garnet which are can be magnetised easily in only one direction. A film of these materials can be created so that it is magnetisable in an up-down direction. The magnetic fields tend to join together, some with the north pole facing up, some with the south. When a veritcal magnetic field is imposed on this, the areas in opposite alignment to the field shrink to circles, or 'bubbles'. A bubble can be formed by reversing the field in a small spot, and can be destroyed by increasing the field. Bubble memory is a kind of non-volatile storage but EEPROM, Flash Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory and ferroelectric technologies, which are also non-volatile, are faster. ["Great Microprocessors of the Past and Present", V 4.0.0, John Bayko <bayko@hercules.cs.uregina.ca>, Appendix C] (1995-02-03)

Wikipédia

Quantum vortex

In physics, a quantum vortex represents a quantized flux circulation of some physical quantity. In most cases, quantum vortices are a type of topological defect exhibited in superfluids and superconductors. The existence of quantum vortices was first predicted by Lars Onsager in 1949 in connection with superfluid helium. Onsager reasoned that quantisation of vorticity is a direct consequence of the existence of a superfluid order parameter as a spatially continuous wavefunction. Onsager also pointed out that quantum vortices describe the circulation of superfluid and conjectured that their excitations are responsible for superfluid phase transitions. These ideas of Onsager were further developed by Richard Feynman in 1955 and in 1957 were applied to describe the magnetic phase diagram of type-II superconductors by Alexei Alexeyevich Abrikosov. In 1935 Fritz London published a very closely related work on magnetic flux quantization in superconductors. London's fluxoid can also be viewed as a quantum vortex.

Quantum vortices are observed experimentally in type-II superconductors (the Abrikosov vortex), liquid helium, and atomic gases (see Bose–Einstein condensate), as well as in photon fields (optical vortex) and exciton-polariton superfluids.

In a superfluid, a quantum vortex "carries" quantized orbital angular momentum, thus allowing the superfluid to rotate; in a superconductor, the vortex carries quantized magnetic flux.

The term "quantum vortex" is also used in the study of few body problems. Under the De Broglie–Bohm theory, it is possible to derive a "velocity field" from the wave function. In this context, quantum vortices are zeros on the wave function, around which this velocity field has a solenoidal shape, similar to that of irrotational vortex on potential flows of traditional fluid dynamics.

Traduction de &#39quantized bubble&#39 en Russe